People in South Korea are the most prolific drinkers in Asia, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).

South Koreans over the age of 15 on average drink 10.9 litres of alcohol a year.

South Koreans drink copious amounts of alcohol so much so that no other country comes close to their per capita consumption. The reason for this unparalleled liquor consumption is ascribed to the country’s liking for Soju, the fermented rice drink.

According to figures from the WHO’s Global Health Observatory Data Repository from 2015, the most recently available, Vietnam is second to South Korea in alcohol consumption, drinking 8.7 litres of alcohol a year.

Thailand was close behind Vietnam at third place in Asia, with 8.3 litres of alcohol a year.

Mongolia and China came in fourth and fifth position in Asia at 7.8 litres and 7.6 litres respectively. In China the rising consumption has been attributed to the culture of drinking where drinking with colleagues is seen as vital to career advancement.

In contrast, Japan, the drinkers’ paradise, has seen a decline in consumption. It shared the sixth spot with Laos with both having equal per capita consumption of alcohol at 7.5 litres.

Though ranked lower than other countries, Cambodia’s drinking habits are on the upswing. On average, Cambodians drank 6.1 litres of alcohol a year.

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Amid increasing urbanisation, the Philippines has also seen a rise in a drinking culture, as well as a growing number of local breweries.

India and Sri Lanka were at a close tenth and eleventh position in Asia, with 4.6 and 4.5 litres of alcohol a year.

On the other end of the spectrum, Singapore, Nepal and Malaysia topped the list of countries which drank the least.

Singapore, which has stringent laws for drinking and thus low alcohol consumption, drank 2.9 litres of alcohol a year on average.

While a high number of people in Nepal drink, it is still one of Asia’s least drinking countries with 2.1 litres a year. Malaysians drank only 1.7 litres of alcohol a year.

Despite being an integral part of Bhutanese culture, alcohol consumption is low in Bhutan at 1.1 litres.

And the most abstinent countries?

Unsurprisingly, they are mostly Muslim states where the sale and consumption of alcohol is restricted. In Indonesia and Bangladesh, the average citizen drinks hardly a bottle of wine in a year at 0.6 and 0.2 litres. The lowest alcohol consumption was reported in Pakistan at nearly 0. (StraitsTimes)